During my planning of our summer holiday to New York City I
had decided to include a visit to the 9/11 Memorial. Initially I hesitated. Who wants to spend a happy, carefree summer
day in a place that is shrouded in so much agony, pain, grief and suffering?
When we drove into the city from JFK airport it became clear to me that we would.
When we drove into the city from JFK airport it became clear to me that we would.
The skyline of Manhattan is one of the most AWESOME sites in
the world. No matter how many times I
see it, I am inspired and mesmerised. It
doesn’t matter if it is day or night, cloudy or crystal clear blue. The sheer enormity of it quite simply takes
my breath away.
Before this summer, my last visit to NYC was a business trip
in September 2000. My husband was in Princeton,
New Jersey for a business trip as well so we overlapped the weekend and a
couple days either side and partied like we partied in 1999. Both on expenses accounts, we ate at the best
restaurants, drank cocktails and champagne, and saw a few tourist trail
highlights. Mostly, we shopped til we
dropped, literally. We could do that
back then: loads of disposable income
for a figure not yet ravaged by the demands of pregnancy and the lethargy of
age.
After suitably exhausting our credit cards in the shops on
the ground floor of the World Trade Centre, my husband suggested we go to the
top floor and enjoy the view. Being the
expert of all things New York, I informed him that a better view was to be from
the top of the Empire State Building.
I’d been to the top of the World Trade Centre before during my 35th
birthday celebrations and preferred the less crowded view from midtown. He reluctantly took my expert opinion and we
left. I promised we would come back some
other time. We never made it back and my promise was broken.
I remember standing outside and looking
back up at the buildings and being amazed by their sheer size. They weren’t beautiful buildings but, holy
moly, they were big. They had a buzz
about them. they looked like they would last forever.
Life took over. We
discovered I was pregnant in October 2000 which put an end to my gallivanting
about the globe. Our next trip was to
introduce our newborn son to my family in Texas, Colorado and Missouri in late
August/early September 2001. We were
exhausted by the end of the trip and eager to get home. But fate had other ideas.
Flying out of Kansas City on 9 September, we were delayed
due to bad weather in Chicago. There’s
always something going wrong in Chicago.
Don’t fly through there if you can avoid it. Don’t get me wrong: I love the city of Chicago but as a hub for
flights, it sucks. Big time.
We eventually arrived in Chicago and raced through the
airport just in time to see the door to our boarding gate being closed. I begged.
I pleaded. I cried. I made
Sebastian cry. Marc yelled. But United Airlines would not allow us to
board that plane I whipped out my
platinum frequent flyer card (this was back when it meant something) and gave
them one of my evil eye looks. It
worked. Sort of.
The airline staff were very apologetic but they kept going
on and on about security requirements and our baggage and blah blah blah. At one point, they had to pull the airplane
back into the gate and remove one piece of luggage because the passenger
associated with it had never boarded the plane.
But would they let us on the plane?
Nooooooooo!
We were given vouchers for a hotel at the airport and
dinner. We were even given some nappies
for Sebastian. We made the best of a bad
situation and went to the hotel and enjoyed a romantic dinner for 2 (pretending
that Sebastian wasn’t sound asleep in his car seat hidden under the table).
On September 10 we boarded the plane with the airlines every
assurance that our baggage was on the same flight that we were and would arrive
at Heathrow at the same time that we did.
This was a very important point as Marc was scheduled to fly back to
Princeton, New Jersey in just a couple days.
His days of gallivanting around the globe hadn’t ended. We needed his suitcase and most of the
contents in them to make the return journey with him.
We landed at London’s Heathrow airport on September 11, 2001
at 6:30 in the morning Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). At 9:30 am we
finally gave up arguing with the airlines about our lost baggage. United Airlines had absolutely no idea where
our luggage was. We had been assured
that they were on the same airplane as we were.
Then we were told they were still on the ground in Chicago. As the last flights had left Chicago for the
day we were promised that our bags would be delivered to our home the next day
from the first flight out of Chicago
Defeated we headed home.
We had a doctor’s appointment to get Sebastian his second set of
immunizations. As we parked the car
outside the doctor’s surgery, we fleetingly heard on the car radio that a plane
had flown into one of the World Trade Centre buildings. As we waited in the queue, I joked with Marc
that some flight controller was going to lose his job and we discussed how
those buildings had been designed to withstand an airplane collision. The immediate anxiety associated with my
child being jabbed by a large needle took over and we forgot about it.
Upon leaving the doctor’s surgery we heard that another plane
had crashed into the other World Trade Centre building. And this wasn’t some light aircraft. These were passenger jets.
When we arrived home, I ran inside and left Marc to get
Sebastian out of the car. I turned on
CNN and could see both towers before me with smoke coming out of them. I turned to Marc and said “We’ll never get
our luggage back. And you certainly won’t be going to the US tomorrow.
Over the next few hours we watched horrified as people jumped from the
burning buildings. We watched the firefighters
rush to and enter the towers. It was
difficult to believe that we weren’t watching a film. I kept hoping that Bruce Willis would appear
or that the broadcast would be interrupted with someone telling us this had all
been a mistake and Hollywood’s next blockbuster had accidentally been premiered
simultaneously, on every news channel in the world
I kept trying to ring my family. All the circuits were busy. No one from the UK could ring the USA.
And then, as if it couldn’t get any worse, the South Tower
collapsed in on itself. I fell to the
floor of our living room. It seemed to
happen in slow motion. There was a knock
at our front door. Our neighbor, Karen,
had arrived to just say how sorry she was.
Marc let her in and she wept with me on the floor.
Then the North Tower collapsed. And then the smoke and the
debris filled all the cameras and we could see no more. There was no more to see. It was all gone. All of it. All of them.
Another plane was reported to have flown into the Pentagon
and mysteriously another plane had crashed into a field in Pennsylvania. No one knew how many planes had been hijacked
and it took a long time to discover the heroic actions of the passengers on
that flight that crashed in Pennsylvania.
At 5 pm (GMT) there was another knock on our door. A man in a taxi was delivering out luggage. No one knows where our luggage had been. And at that moment, I really didn't care.
The airspace over the USA was closed. Planes all over the world were grounded. The world to stopped. The world cried.
Hospitals in New York prepared to treat thousands of injured
people but they found so few that the hospital emergency staff was stood
down. Donors of blood were sent
home. The dead do not need blood.
Thousands were reported missing. Thousands were never found. In all nearly 3,000 people died in the
towers.
I felt helpless. I felt hopeless. I wanted to come home. and I wanted to run away.
I still can’t watch footage of the planes flying into the
buildings, or the people jumping out of the wreckage, or the buildings
collapsing to the ground without crying.
I can feel my heart race as I recall the terror of those moments and the
disbelief of what I was seeing.
There was a part of me that needed to see it to believe it. As I approached the area where those giants of buildings
used to stand I could not only see their absence. I could feel it. I could feel the sadness. I could feel the pain. It still feels and looks like a bomb site. I suppose it always will. I suppose it always should.
As I stood at the fountains and read the names, my tears
started to flow.
When I tried to explain to my children what had happened
here, my daughter looked up at me and with disbelief she asked, “But, mummy,
why would anyone fly airplanes into buildings on purpose?”
Why, indeed? How do you ever explain that level of hatred to a
child? I still struggle to understand the
hatred of a terrorist.
When we read the names, I tried to explain, that many of
them were firefighters who had selflessly entered these burning
buildings to save other people. “Why
would anyone go into a burning building to save other people when they might
get hurt themselves?”
Why, indeed? I struggled then to explain the heroism and the sacrifice of
the people who tried to help the helpless.
When I explained that there were new buildings being built
here, she asked me, “Won’t someone just fly more airplanes into them?”
And then I struggled to explain hope. For without hope, there can be nothing else.
1 comment:
Lovely article LaDawn..... really lovley
CH x
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